Gov. Cuomo says he doesn’t get it — yesterday’s Post editorial raising possible linkages between New York City’s spate of murderous shootings with a number of dubious criminal-friendly political decisions and court rulings.

“I haven’t seen any causal relationship between those court decisions and what happened recently,” said Cuomo — by which he meant the surge in violent crime.

And he says he particularly doesn’t see possible ties between the softening of the strict Rockefeller drug laws to what Cuomo called “the July 4th situation.”

Is there absolute proof?

Of course not.

There rarely is.

But it’s also difficult to deny that — between “turn-’em-loose” judges, anti-stop-and-frisk activism and the scaled-back Rocky laws — New York City today is more crime-friendly than it’s been for years.

And that was underscored by Saturday’s drug-related bloodbath in Springfield Gardens involving an AK-47 knockoff.

Police sources said two gunmen — one armed with a semi-automatic rifle and one with a 9-mm handgun — got off 63 rounds between them, leaving three men dead.

The possible cause? Revenge for a $1 million ripoff of a drug dealer.

Certainly, cops say, it was drug-related — though remarkable largely because of the high volume of gunfire.

So why is New York seeing this startling and disturbing rise in violent crime?

We listed three factors yesterday: Fewer cops on the street; political and court attacks on stop-and-frisk; the virtual dismantling of the drug laws.

And where there are illegal drugs, there are illegal guns. Fact of life.

Cuomo, again, says he doesn’t see it.

Maybe he should look a little closer.

Maybe he should speak to the city’s district attorneys — like Queens DA Richard Brown, who told The Post: “I don’t think there’s any question that the recent violence has occurred as a result of the changes in the drug laws.”

Or to Special Narcotics Prosecutor Bridget Brennan.

Or Police Commissioner Ray Kelly.

Or to a few of the detectives who routinely respond to shootings.

They all know things have changed.

Today’s drug dealers have no real fear of doing hard time. Which is why drug arrests are down — because cops increasingly see them as pointless.

Moreover, the lack of long sentences eliminates any real leverage for prosecutors with drug kingpins.

As for stop-and-frisks — under relentless political and judicial attack — there are simply fewer being done. So more perps are carrying guns.

The end result: more and more mayhem on the sidewalks of New York. And a return to the bad old pre-Giuliani days when criminals ruled the street.

New York eventually wised up back then — and cracked down on violent crime.